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A03949 Bromelion A discourse of the most substantial points of diuinitie, handled by diuers common places: vvith great studie, sinceritie, and perspicuitie. Whose titles you haue in the next page following. S. I., fl. 1595.; Bèze, Théodore de, 1519-1605. Summa totius Christianismi. English. 1595 (1595) STC 14057; ESTC S107410 412,250 588

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himselfe wrath against the day of wrath and of the declaration of the iust iudgement of GOD. An other sort there is that willingly plucke their neckes out of the choller and would be spectators and beholders of other mens misery by reason of sinne and transgression There is no man iust by excuse thinking themselues without spot and blamelesse standing vppon this guarde that they neuer knew the law of Moses the seruaunt of GOD whereby they might direct their liues according to the will of GOD. Nothing regarding the firmament the heauens and all other creatures whereby they are incited to acknowledge the eternall power and wisedome of God and to glorifie him in them and to giue him thankes for so great benefites which he hath ordeined for the vse of man But more blockish are they which boast and vaunt of the The righteousnesse of man standeth not in the knowledge of the lawe knowledge of the lawe of God as did the Iewes who put all their safetie in this that Abraham was their father that the oracles of God were committed to them that the couenaunt was propper vnto them that the temple of God was amongst them that they were the people of God and the beloued of the Lord and yet for all this labour not to liue in the obedience of the lawe For the Lorde chose them as a peculiar people that they might serue him in all holinesse and righteousnesse which thing they altogither neglected thinking that God had chosen them for their worthinesse Wherefore the foolish All excuse takē away from them heart of man which is full of darkenesse cannot deuice any way how to be righteous but his deuices and his righteousnesse is foolishnesse before God and altogither condemned of the spirituall man For if hec thinke to bee iust by condemning other breaking out into these words with the Pharisée O God I thanke thée that I am not as other men extorcioners vniust adulterers or euen as this publican he Hipocrite pronounceth the sentence of iudgement against himself in that comparing his life to the law he is most culpable and faultie But rather let vs vnderstand and learne what the meaning of this is Euerie man that exalteth himselfe shal be brought lowe and he that humbleth himselfe shal be exalted If he would start aside because he knoweth not Gentile the lawe and so imagine himselfe to be frée his conscience is a thousand witnesses and the light of nature and reason commaunding and highlie commending those things which are good hating forbidding and punishing those things which are wicked and euil sheweth him how to liue in the seruice and feare of God For in that by nature saith the Apostle of all they doe the things contained in the lawe they hauing not the lawe are a lawe vnto themselues and they that haue sinned without the lawe shall perish without the lawe The effect of which knowledge of God by the light of nature and reason being written in their hearts and consciences shall ridde them from all excuse and be most effectuall yea horrible in that dreadfull day of doome when God shall iudge the secrets of men by Iesus Chist the bookes that is their consciences being then laid open Lastly if only the knowledge of the lawe Iewe. could preuaile that therby we might be iustified and counted righteous we had wherein we might reioyce But séeing not the hearers but the doers of the law are iustified before God and that God requireth a circumcised hart and is uot satisfied with vaine shewes and ceremonies it followeth that they are not iust which onlie know the lawe and y●the circumcision of the hart I mean the inward righteousnes consisteth in the spirit not in the letter Wherefore they that sinne in the law that is hauing knowledge of the lawe shal be iudged by the lawe This then is the full summe of the matter that both Iewes and Gentiles are vnder sinne that is are iustly condemned for sinnes and are subiect to the curse which is due vnto sinne For as with righteousnesse there is absolution so with sinne there is condemnation So that it is not in man to ridde himselfe from the curse of the lawe by any deuised righteousnesse Hitherto the drift of the Apostle hath beene to shewe howe that mans righteousnesse is farre from the obedience of the lawe and that righteousnesse which God requireth at our handes And endeuouring to giue a more cleare light to the righteousnesse of God hée plucketh away the visor of their faigned righteousnesse and discouereth their faces yea he setteth before vs and launceth out the venome and corruption of our heart comparing our righteousnesse or rather our excessiue wickednesse with the rule of the lawe which by a fit exaggeration he sheweth vs as plaine as if blacke and white were laid togither darkenesse and light were weighed in a ballaunce Such is therefore the righteousnesse of man that The righteousnesse of man compared to the lawe howe faultie it is wée thinke our selues iust without the knowledge of the lawe without the effectuall working thereof and before we examine our selues our liues and sinnes thereby Sinne is not imputed while there is no lawe and no man is punished as guiltie and faultie For where no lawe is there is no transgression and contrariwise by the lawe is the knowledge of sinne And sinne that it might appeare sinne worketh death in vs by that which is good that sinne might be out of measure sinfull by the commandement Moreouer the lawe entered thereupon By the lawe is the knowledge of sin that sinne might abounde both that which is originall and that which daily carrieth the sway in our actions The vse of this manifestation is referred to The vse of the lawe is two sold two pointes The first is that men might be so much the more guiltie Secondly the benefit of god in Christ Iesus should bee so much the more glorious The second VVhat the lawe is in it self and what to vs. The lawe is spirituall generall poynt in this comparison is what the lawe is in it selfe and also hauing respect vnto vs. In it selfe it is holy and the commaundement holy iust and good it is spirituall and requireth of vs an beauenly purenesse yea the heart and inwarde affection because God iudgeth the secret motions of the same and a chéerfulnesse and a willingnesse in the outwarde déede So that nothing is more contrary to the lawe then hypocrisie lying and deceit Nowe then as the lawe is spirituall so wée VVe are carnall are carnall solde vnder sinne and being in the flesh the affections of sinne which are by the lawe haue force in our members to bring foorth frute vnto death Yea the whole naturall man is bondslaue to the lawe of the fleshe and of sinne whiche possesseth the vnregenerate and wholly raigneth in them For they neither will nor doo good so that although the lawe of nature and
her painted feathers thinkes her selfe fairer then any beast and none so bewtifull as she but when shée turneth downe her eyes and looketh on her blacke and dirtie legges then shée lets fall her plume of feathers with the conceit whereof shée looked so aloft Many looke so high that they knowe not the ground they treade on and fouly would they take scorne if it should be tolde them that they were but dust and earth The Prophet Ieremy to pull downe the high stomackes of the people to whome he was sent doth not doubt to call them so repeating it often in their eares that they might remember it O earth earth heare the word of the Lord. Which thing that godly Abraham well remembring freely and of his owne accord confesseth when he made his request vnto God for Sodome Behold saith he now I haue begunne to speake vnto my Lorde I am but dust and ashes Fewe there be that thinke so and more fewe that will acknowledge it Hée that is of base degrée vaunts himselfe of nobilitie and they that come of noble blood lift vp themselues to the skies as if the staffe should boast it selfe that it were no wood They neuer looke downe to the earth from whence they came nor consider the graue wherunto they must go Dust and ashes earth and wormes meate To consider that we came of the dust is not only profitable to bring vs to humilitie and to knowe our selues but also to put vs in minde of our latter ende that we may be the better prepared vnto God and learne to deny our selues and forsake the world Naked came I out of my mothers wombe and naked shall I returne to my first mould to the wombe of all things that is the earth Dust was my first creation and dust shall be my latter end and my dissolution And yet it is woorth the marking to sée howe GOD dooth set foorth his glorie héerein that that creature which hee made of dust and earth should haue continued for euer and neuer died if the same creature had continued in his obedience and truly performed that which hée moste easily had commaunded Although man was created of the dust in his first beginning yet God caused him to increase and multiply by naturall seed and by lawfull matrimony Wherein also Gods worke is daily wonderfull and miraculous For although the parentes doo their indeuoure yet it is God that frameth the childe in the wombe of the mother by his mightie power neither dooth that matter alwaies come to passe after a naturall sort For monsters oftentimes come from women not by the meanes of the parentes but God hath so ordeaned it that they should bee tokens of his iudgementes And that the childe in the wombe is the worke of God let vs search it out in his word The wise man vttereth it in this sort In my mothers wombe was I fashioned to be flesh in tenne moneths Wisedome 7. 2. I was brought togither into blood of the seede of man and by the pleasure that commeth with sleepe The pleasure that commeth with sléepe then séede the seede is turned into blood and after commeth flesh But wherehence are bones and sinewes the order the shape and the proportion of the bodie The Prophet Dauid Psal 139. 14. declareth it and saith I am woonderously made And speaketh of God his woorke thus Thou hast couered me in my mothers wombe my bones are not hid from thee though I was made in a secret place and fashioned beneath in the earth thine eyes did see me when I was without forme for in thy booke were all my members written which in contiuuance of time were fashioned when as there was none of them before After séede and blood and flesh and bones and sinewes and all things prepared and set in order then comes the soule but not from the soule of the parents for God giueth the soule by his secret power and vnsearchable working aske not how but content thy selfe and wonder Yet if thou desirest to haue this matter more plainly shewed thée turne to the tenth chapter of Iob and reade his words which are these directing his speech vnto God Hast thou not powred me out as milke and turned me to curddes like cheese thou hast cloathed mee with skinne and flesh and ioyned mee togither with bones and sinewes And thou hast giuen me life and grace that is reason and vnderstanding and many other gifts whereby man excelleth all earthly creatures Whē God had made man hee breathed into him the breath of life and he was a liuing soule Yet this is not sufficient to declare how man was created in the image of God and according to his likenesse Which image and likenesse is not so to be vnderstood that either in body or in soule we doo resemble God himselfe For God hath no such forme and substance neither doth he consist of flesh or blood or bone God is a spirit and altogither incomprehensible Neither let it any thing at all moue vs so to be perswaded because wée reade in the scripture The mouth of the Lord hath spoken it the eyes of the Lorde beholde all things his eares are open to the praiers of them that feare him he deliuered his people by a mightie hand and a stretched out arme he will make his enemies his footestoole Not that God hath either mouth or eyes or eares or hands or armes or féete but it is so set down in respect of our weaknesse who are not able to vnderstand heuenly matters but by earthly similitudes and by familiar examples and comparisons And because we are too earthly minded therfore by such spéeches we are lifted vp to the consideration of more excellent things In the shape and proportion of mans bodie he is more comely and beautifull then all the rest of gods creatures yea and God hath planted in his face and countenance a maiestie that all other creatures might feare him and reuerence him yet we must not thinke with our selues rudely and grosly that the image of God consisteth in y● outward proportion lineaments and shape of the bodie although herein God hath graunted mankind a superioritie dignitie and worthinesse Because the bodies of all other creatures are framed as it were groueling on the ground but mankind is made vpright to beholde the heauens and those things that are aboue the heauens and that by a supernatural and extraordinary sight The image of God is not this outward shape and proportion but the inward and most vertuous qualities of the soule Wherefore it was no maruell that God said Let vs make man taking counsell of his wisdome and power Concerning all things else that he made he onely said Let it be so and they were so but hauing further care of mankind as of a matter more waightie he taketh more aduicement and mindeth to shewe a greater excellency in the creatiō of man and woman to whose soules he gaue so great gifts and graces Whereby the way let vs
he hath purposed in him In whom also we are chosen when we were predestinate according to the purpose of him which worketh all things after the counsell of his own wil. Gal. 1. 4. Iob. 9. 10. God doth great things and vnsearchable yea maruellous things without number Rom. 9. 20. O man who art thou which pleadest against god shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou made me thus That God hath the ordering of mens affaires as also of hardning the heart Gene. 45. 7. 8. Ioseph to his brethren God saith he sent me before you to preserue your posteritie in this land and to saue you aliue by a great deliuerance Now then ye sent me not hither but God who hath made me a father vnto Pharaoh and Lord of all his house and ruler throughout all the land of Egipt Esay 10. 5. 6. 7. 8. 11. 12. 13. 15. O Ashur the rod of my wrath and the staffe in their hand is mine indignation I wil send him to a dissembling nation and I will giue him a charge against the people of my wrath to take the spoile and to take the pray and to tread them vnder féete like the mire in the stréete But hée thinketh not so neither doeth his heart estéeme it so but he imagineth to destroy and cut off not a fewe nations For he saith Are not my princes altogither Kings Shall not I as I haue done to Samaria and to the idoles thereof so do to Ierusalem and the idoles thereof But when the Lord hath accomplished all his worke vpon mount Sion and Ierusalem I will visit the frute of the proud hart of the king of Ashur and his glorious and proud lookes Because he said By the power of mine owne hand haue I done it and by my wisdome because I am wise Shall the axe boast it selfe against him that heweth therewith or shall the sawe exalt it selfe against him that moueth it As if the rod should lift vp it selfe against him that taketh it vp or the staffe should exalt it selfe as it were no wood When God hath punished his children with the rod he casteth it into the fire Iere. 10. 23. O Lord I know that the way of man is not in himselfe neither is it in man to walke and to direct his stepps For though man may purpose yet God will dispose 1. Kings 12. 15. The king Rehoboam Salomons sonne a wise father and a foolish sonne following the counsaile of young men and gréene heades harkened not to the lawfull request of the people For it was the ordinance of the Lord the he might performe his saiyng which he had spoken by Ahijah the Shilonite vnto Ieroboam the sonne of Nebat 2. Chro. 10. 15. A note out of the Geneua bible vpon this place of scripture concerning Rehoboam who yéelded vnto young mens counsaile Gods wil imposeth such a necessitie to the second causes that nothing can be done but by the same And yet mans will worketh as of it selfe so that it cannot bée excused in doing euiil by alledging that it is Gods ordinance 2. Chro. 11. 4. When Rehoboam had gathered nine score thousand chosen men of warre to fight against Israell that is those his subiects which did rebell against him the Lord warned him them by his prophet Shemaiah saiyng Ye shall not goe vp nor fight against your bretheren returne euery man to his house For this thing is done of me saieth the Lord. They obeied therefore the worde of the Lord and returned from going against Ieroboham 2. Chro. 22. 7. And the destruction of Ahaziah came of god in the he went to Ioram For when he was come he went forth with Ioram against lehu the sonne of Nimshi whom the Lord had annointed to destroy the house of Ahab 2. Chro. 25. 19. 20. King Ioash sent vnto king Amaziah and said Thou thinkest lo thou hast smitten Edome thy hart lifteth thée vp to brag Abide nowe at home why doest thou prouoke to thine hurt the thou shouldst fall Iudah with thée But Amaziah would not heare for it was of God that he might deliuer them into his hand because they sought the Gods of Edom. The note vpon the place Thus God oftentimes plagueth by these meanes wherein men most trust to teach them to haue their recourse only to him And to shewe his iudgements he moueth their hearts to followe that which shal be their destruction The ordering of the iourney of Abrahams seruaunt and of the thrée wise men that sought Christ by the leading of a starre the circumstaunces also of Christ his death and passion shewe how God ruleth the affaires of man Psal 64 8. 9. Their owne tongs shall make them fall insomuch that who so seeth them shall laugh them to scorne And all men that sée it shall say This hath God done for they shal perceiue that it is his worke Pro. 19. 33. The lot is cast into the lappe but the disposition thereof is of the Lord. Which thing is wonderfully expressed in the story of Ionas God ordereth not only their affaires but their affections also as hatred good-will ioy and sorow Pro. 21. 1. The kings heart is in the hand of the Lord as the riuers of waters he turneth it whither soeuer it pleaseth him Ge. 21. 22. 23. Esther 15. 11. Acts. 4. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. Why did the Gentiles rage and the people imagine vaine things The kings of the earth assembled and the rulers came togither against the Lord and against his Christ For doubtlesse against thine holy sonne Iesus whom thou hadst annointed both Herode and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and people of Israel gathered themselues togither to do whatsoeuer thine hand and thy counsaile had determined before to be done 2. Sa. 16. 11. Dauid saide to Abishai and to his seruants Behold my sonne which came out of mine owne bowels séeketh my life then how much more now may this sonne of Iemini Suffer him to curse for the Lorde hath bidden him It may be that the Lord will looke vpon my affliction and do me good for his cursing this day Pro. 16. 7. When the waies of a man please the Lord hée will make also his enemies at peace with him Gen. 31. Now Iacob heard the words of Labans sonnes saying Iacob hath taken away all that was our fathers and of our fathers goods hath he gotten all his honor Also Iacob beheld the countenance of Laban that it was not towards him as in times past And the Lord said vnto Iacob Turne againe into the land of thy fathers and to thy kindred and I wil be with thée Then Iacob called his wiues and said I sée your fathers countenance that it is not towards me as it was wont and the God of my father hath bin with me And ye know that I haue serued your father with all my might But your father hath deceiued me and changed my wages ten times the is oftentimes but god suffered
bread and they that know the right vse therof will be also readie to giue thanks to God when they haue refreshed themselues Whereas they that are giuen to their pleasures are like to swine that are gréedie of the maste so that their flesh being prompt their lusts may abound In the Epistle to the Gal. where other sinnes are noted by one name the sin of lecherie is expressed by diuers names as adultery fornication vncleannesse wantonnesse to note vnto vs the pronesse of mans nature and their gréedie desire to sin Watching and waking night day deuising and casting how to bring their naughtie purpose to passe making only account of them that shall further them in their desires and serue their turnes spending all their wealth nay further then that wasting al their strength and yet more laying their soules to pawne for the enioying of a little pleasure vntill their wealth bee turned to pouerty their strength to weaknesse sicknesse and loathsome diseases vntill all hope bee turned to dispaire life to death and saluation to damnation Wherefore the holi● spirit of God knowing the sinfull hastinesse and vnsatiable desire of mankind herein draweth the excesse into a meane and for extremitie enioyneth vs sobrietie and for auoiding all mischiefes dooth set vs downe a remedie For sobrietie is the moderatour of the minde and dooth restraine our vnbrideled affections It is a gift that dooth kéepe the mind from pleasures altogither and in those that be lawfull it kéepeth vs from the excesse and abuse of them The gift of chastitie is rare and the cōtrary is to rife which causeth the Apostle to vse these words Good it were for a man not to touch a woman and I could wish it were with other as it is with my self neuerthelesse to auoid fornication let euerie man haue his wife and euery woman her owne husband And againe if they cannot abstaine let them marry for it is better to marry then to burne And that they might vse the benifit of marriage soberly and not in excesse as a remedy to theire concupiscence and not as a libertie to the flesh he giueth counsaile further This I say brethren because the time is short Let them that haue wiues be as though they had none Vnto the which agreeth that of the Apostle S. Peter 1. Epi. 4. 7. Now the ende of all things is at hand be ye therefore sober and watching in praier As if he had said as much as is possible let the whole time of our life be spent in holinesse knowing this that no vncleane thing shall enter into the kingdome of God Let vs walke honestly not in gluttony and drunkennesse neither in chambering and wantonnesse but let vs put on the Lord Iesus Christ and be clothed with the garment of holinesse neither let vs take thought for the flesh to fulfill the lusts of it I beséech you receiue not the grace of God in vaine Pride and brauery in apparrel excesse in building no Apparrell measure in expences this is the fashion of the world And the ouerplus and ouerlashing that euerie one is giuen vnto declareth howe farre we are by nature from sobrietie and that sobrietie and a measure is the gifte of the grace of God True it is that men are too too giuen to pride and braue apparrell and many doo set their glorie and their felicitie therein whose glorie is to their shame and whose felicitie and happinesse is sinfull Lightly they are but scorned and contemned in the sight of others who shall beholde theire vanitie while they thinke thereby to be honoured And as we reade that God regardeth the humble so he beholdeth the proud afarre of The prophet Esay the apostle S. Paul séeing the excesse of apparell and this vice of pride more to abound in women dooth especially note it and rebuke it in them The Prophet Esay in his third chapter sheweth the vanitie of the women in his daies and howe God would punish theire excessiue desires his words are these The Lord also saith Because the daughters of Sion are hautie and walke with stretched out neckes and with wandring eies walking and musing as they goe and making a tinkling with theire féete Therefore shall the Lord make the heades of the daughters of Sion bald In that day shall the Lord take away the ornament of the slippers and the calles and the round tiers the swéet balles and the bracelets and the bonnets the tiers of the head the tablets and the earings the ringes and the muflers the costly apparrell and the vailes and the wimples and the crisping pinnes and the glasses the fine linnen and the hoods and the launes And in stéed of swéete sauour their shal be stincke and in stéed of a girdle a rent and in stéed of dressing of the hair baldnesse and in stéed of a stomacher a gir●ing of sackcloath and burning in stéed of beautie No man can be ignorant that apparrell was ordained to couer our nakednesse to kéepe vs warme and to preserue our health and not to shew our brauery or to spend our thrift thereon And because the Apostle did perceiue that women were more faultie herein therefore he counsaileth them 1. Tim. 2. 5. That if they will be accounted to be godly and sober that they should lay aside all brauery and array themselues in comely apparel with shamefastnesse modestie not with broidered hair or gold or pearles or costly garments but as becommeth women that professe the fear of God that they shuld deck themselues with good works and shewe their brauerie in their almes and relieuing those y● stand in néed The Apostle S. Pet. 1. Epi. 3. 3. Likewise hath almost the same words and giueth a little more light to this perswasion The apparrelling of women let it not bee so much outward saieth hée in breivered haire and gold put about and in glorious apparell But if they will be commended for their modestie and sobrietie let the hid man of their hearts be vncorrupt with a méeke and quiet spirit which is before God a thing much set by And if they delight in braue apparrell let this be theire apparrell and no other For euen after this manner in time past did the holy woman which trusted in God tier themselues and were subiect to their husbands A note well put in And were subiect to theire husbands For many of them being too wilfull and too stately altogither against the wills of their husbands and beyond their husbands power and abilitie bring them into debt and pouerty and make them oftentimes to vse vnlawful meanes to maintaine their brauery Which is a token of incontinency that they had rather please the eies of others then their owne husbands For commonly lewde women are noted by their braue attire Braue without and foule within painted sepulchers and rotten bones Better it were braue within and comely without modest and sober at home and abroad in euery place To this warning which is giuen to
his Isaac youth and to perish in the sloure of his age tried also with famine in a straunge land This thought of minde grieued him being among strangers whose dispesition he knewe not but shrewdly did suspect what would fall out It may be saith he to his wife I shall die for thée because some other would possesse thy beauty So he perswaded her to call him brother His last and no doubt not the least sorrowe was to sée his desire preuented For he thought to poure aboundance of blessings on his eldest sonne Esau but God turned it otherwise What passions and seas of sorrowe possessed his hart to heare his sonne Esau whome he made so great account of to cry out in bitter teares and that out of measure Insomuch that betwixt feare and anger his mind was sore vexed For he was stricken with a maru●lious great feare and his anger enforced him to say who and where is he And after long absence when Iacob came to sée his father we reade not of any comfortable words that his father gaue him Yet was this Iacob for all his fathers Iacob blessing a patterne of sorrowe Iobe and Iacob all one The very first time of his sorrowe two mightie distresses the hazard of his fathers curse and the feare of death by his brother Esaus sword Next he that should be heire of so great possessions and blessings must vnder go a seruile life for seuen yeares and for seuen watching night and day in heate and cold a faithfull seruant and yet mistrusted to be false he that should haue béene most plentifully rewarded groind and grudged at and pursued with hatred His heart and cheefest ioy for whome he serued fourtéene yeares taken away in bitter sorrow of child-birth His sorrowe increased with w●●ull griefe to sée his eldest sonne Reubin to commit incest his daughter Dina to be de●loured by a stranger Two other of his sonnes imbruing their hands with murther and thereby putting him in feare of his life Pincht with famine brought into a strange country where his posterity should liue in sorrowe And if his youngest sonne Beniamin be taken from him then do they bring his heare head with sorrow to the graue As though he had begunne and ended his life in sorrowe Ioseph put Ioseph in feare of his life among his owne brethren solde vnto merchants and as it were vtterly bannished from the presence of his father and all his kindred falsly accused and slaundered cast out of fauour and throwne into prison in a strange country wher was no hope of help to be looked for Moses in his youth like to be cast away and drowned like Moses to be put to death by withstanding the mighty king Pharao hated of his owne people who being sent for their deliuerance thought him to be the cause of their oppression whom they grudged against saying Why hast thou brought vs into the wildernesse to slay vs enuies reprochfully vsed especially of Core Dathan and Abiram the princes of the people My penne would faile mée and I should be too tedious vnto you if I should write this matter to the full And what should I more say for the time will not serue mée to tell of Dauid and all his troubles being worst thought on Dauid of whome he best deserued his guiltlesse blood sought for of him whose honour and life he had preserued readie to be cast out of his throne by him whome he could haue vouchsafed his throne his rebellious sonne Absolon and for whom he wept bitterly Murther and incest among his owne children Oh sorrows more then tragicall Iobs sorrowes Iob. are knowne to euerie one losse of goods the vntimely death of his children greuous sores on his body from top to toe the heauie temptation of his wife the strangenesse of his familiars enmitie of his friends Yea his sorrow was so great that he cursed the day of his birth Michaiah Ieremiah Daniel and all the prophets examples of sorrow to Prophets Christ succéeding ages Our sauior Christ fainting and as it were ouercome of sorrowe his sorrowes being surpassing great Apostles and more then straunge and wonderfull The Apostles appointed hereeunto especially the Apostle S. Paule who may stand for all the rest and in whome you may perceiue all the sorrowes that might befall them As is worthely set downe 2. Cor. 11. 23. In stripes aboue measure in Paul prison plentiously in death oft once stoned and left for dead night and day in the déepe sea and almost cast away by shipwracke In perils of waters in perils of robbers in perils of mine owne nation in perils among the Gentiles in perils in the cittie in perils in the wildernesse in perils among false brethren In wearinesse and painfulnesse in watching often in hunger and thirst in fastings often in cold and in nakednesse A learned man writing of the sorrowes of the godly in this worlde compareth them vnto a shippe tossed on the sea hauing alwaies weather and winde against them Our life is but short and in this shortnesse good Lord how many chaunges how many stormes and how many tempests Abel Abraham Isaac Iacob Ioseph the Israelites chasticed in the wildernesse of the Lord and in continuall stormes warre and battaile before they could be placed in the land of Canaan And when they were come thither and long had dwelt there in the end their temple was spoiled their people murthered their cities rased and they led captiues into straunge countries Let euery one looke into himselfe and behold what cause of sorrow our own rebellious and disordered desires which neuer suffer vs to enioy any long rest of mind which bring vs sometimes more sorrow thē we can put off moue vs vnto Some are troubled with one vnquietnesse some with an other Some cannot rest for cares of the world som swel with pride and come to their fall some boile in rancer consume themselues some fry in lust and end their daies in sorowful diseases being spectacles of sorow some carried away headlong with anger and sléepe goeth from their eies to thinke howe they may bee reuenged Such procure sorrowe to themselues and néede no sorrowe to be laide vpon them The daies of this world to the godly are nothing else in a manner but dismall daies and sorrowfull times yea the estate of all in this world is but sorrowfull Either we are hated of the world or else which is worse of God assaulted of Sathan subiect to the manifold diseases both of body and soule the one miserable the other most daungerous and intollerable Many in number and diuers in nature are the sorrowes that fall out in the world Some are afflicted by exile and banishment some by captiuitie and imprisonment some by famine and nakednesse some by perill persecution some by slander and reproachfull contumely some by rackings tearing in péeces some by slaughter sword some by fire and fagot some by
to be scorned whose desire is to liue according to Gods will and commandements And this is a greate cause of the fall of many that otherwise would doe well let them that vse it refraine it they knowe not what hurt they doe The least of vs are readie to fall away and therfore the Apostle willeth vs to exhort and Esd 10. 50. prouoke one another vnto good workes daily This mocking and taunting the Apostle doubteth not to call by the name of persecution wherewith Isaac was vexed by Ismael In consideration whereof it gréeueth the godly that they are aliue among the wicked whose reproachfull spéeches and vngodly behauiour haue bin pricks in their sides and thorns in their eies if not knines to their throats and as grieuous as the point of a dagger to their hearts For if they looke into the world and take a viewe of the fashion of men amongst whome they must liue they shall sée the mallice of Caine reuiued the hatred of Esau set on foote flattering tongues like Ioab but murdering minds Some as proud and as diuellish as Haman some as trecherous as Iudas some as cruel as Iezabel as incroching and gréedily hunting after other mens mainteuance and liuings if not their liues withall as euer was wicked Achab Naboths vineard litle kindnesse and much churlishnesse as bad or worse then that of Nabal many dissemblers as Ananias and where is the man that speaketh the truth from his heart For the most part all the conuersation of the wicked stanvpon Vncleannesse to beare so greate asway baudry and vncleannes Iust Lot was vexed with the vncleanly conuersation of the wicked For he being righteous and dwelling among them in séeing hearing vexed his righteous soule from day to day with their vnlawfull déeds In respect of all which snares and incombrances the godly are vexed with sorrow euē to the death I am aweary of my life for the daughters of Heth saith Rebeccay Abrahams wife It is inough now O Lord take my soule for I am no better then my fathers séeing I only am aliue and the rest hath forsaken thée saith Elias Woe is me saith the Prophet Dauid Ps 120. 5. that I must dwell with Mesech and haue mine habitation among the tents of Cedar My soule hath too long dwelt among them Yet hath God so appointed that we should shine as glistring starres amongst a naughty generation Whose behauiour shall make vs more wary and circumspect as also our good workes which they shall sée and behold shall turn either to their happy conuersion or most iust confusion and endlesse condemnation The weake minds which are not as yet throughly strengthned wish daily continually although it be godly and wel with the Apostle I desire to be dissolued and to be with Christ which is best of all Hitherto of the sorrowes of the godly And y● I may make perfect this part touching the difference betwixt the godly and the wicked concerning ioy and sorrow as also that ye may be the better comforted and encouraged to vndertake and endure sorrow I will let you vnderstand howe that the world hath his sorrow also And séeing I haue begun to be tedious beare with mee a while I hope you will not thinke your labour altogither lost in reading which may be at your leisure though it cost mee some studie to gather it Who would thinke that the wicked should haue any sorrow in this world howsoeuer they are like to spéed in the world to come séeing they haue the world at will and as the Prophet saith they come in no misfortune like other men And yet it falleth out sometimes that they haue sorrow but what is the cause of their sorrow No other but for worldly matters for temporall losses and that their transitorie ioyes are abated and diminished As for example when their goods are taken by pirates their wealth consumed by shipwracke their houses burnt with fire their landes taken from them by violent oppression their riches wasted by vsurie their libertie restrained by imprisonment their children to miscarry suddeinly their friends either to die or to fall away from them daily as the wise man saith In prosperitie a friend cannot bee knowne and in aduersitie and calamitie a mans verie friend will fall away from him and forsake him Now when these miseries and these worldly calamities come vppon them what crying what wringing of hands what lamenting what wéeping is there among them But that God by their wickednesse is offended his name through them blasphemed his lawe and holy word contemned his patience and long sufferance daily prouoked and abused his threatnings his admonitions his counsels neglected his louing mercies forgotten and his great benefits not remembred that many good things pertaining to our dutie haue bin through our follies omitted and many wickednesses whereof we should haue bene cleare committed by vs who wéepeth for these matters who lamenteth for these causes The world reioyceth in hurting the godly and if their mischiefe and their mallice be preuented then are they sorry for nothing more then that they can do no more hurt nor any more mischief where the godly pray for them their cōuersion How do they enuy maligne those persons in whō they sée Gods gifts graces This was the cause y● Iosephs brethren hated him that Core Dathan and Abiram did set themselues against Moses that king Saul did enuy and séeke the destruction of Dauid Whereat the godly are not to take any discomfort for their enuie shall not hurt them no more then Ioseph and Moses and Dauid was hurt For God shal turn all to his glorie and their good as is in his good pleasure determined of them And as they cannot abide the godly so secretly in their hearts they hate God as their déedes and workes declare for if the loue of God were in them the fruites therof would also appeare For who are more backward to heare Gods word to be present at his diuine seruice who make lesse accompt of christian profession yea they hate it they scoffe and scorne it and they that counsell them to religion goodnesse are their chiefest enemies King Dauid bearing the person of the godly was otherwise minded who counted it his great sorow that he was debarred for a time from Gods seruice Ps 48. 3. O Lord of hostes how amiable are thy tabernacles my soule longeth yea and fainteth for the courts of the Lord for my heart my flesh reioyce in the liuing God Yea the sparrow hath found her an house and the swallow a neast for her where she may lay her yoong ones euen by the altars ô Lord of hostes my king and my God But because the wicked are so set against God good men therefore the Prophet said truely of them Many are the sorrowes and great are the plagues that remaine for the wicked Psa 32. 10. Which is most effectually set downe Eccles 40. Great trauell is created for all men
vnto thée from thy God For I will set mine eies vpon them for good and I wil bring them again to this land and I wil build them and not destroy them and I wil plant them and not roote them out saith the Lord. Therfore they shall come reioyce in the height of Sion and shall run to the bountifulnesse of the Lord euen for the wheat for the wine and for the oile for the increase of shéep bullocks and their soule shal be as a watred garden they shall haue no more sorrow Then shal the virgin reioyce in the dance and the yong men the old mē togither for I wil turn their mourning into ioy wil comfort them giue them ioy for their sorrows And y● voice of ioy and the voice of gladnesse and the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride shal be heard in their stréets as also the voice of them y● shal say Praise the Lord of hostes because the Lord is good for his mercy endureth for euer Hagar Abrahams handmaid being ready to wéepe out her hart with sad mournfull teares and pittious lamentable cries God caused her to behold ioy and gaue her the life of her infant when it was ready to die with thirst promised her moreouer that of him shuld come a great people What trobles did king Dauid endure whē he was a subiect vnder king Saul who continually sought his death and most cruelly and vndeseruedly to shead his innocent blood how many feares how many flights how many dangers Where death was God made life appeare where contempt was God gaue credit and when his crosses were ended God gaue him his crowne to reioyce him Which made him thankfull to God saying Thou hast turned my mourning into ioy thou hast loosed my sackcloth and girded mee with gladnesse Therefore shall my tongue praise thee and not cease O Lord my God I will giue thankes vnto thee for euer Ieremiah the Prophet beaten cast into prison readie to starue for hunger like to be put to death but the Lord hi● him Who had regard of his trouble and of his sorrow and sent him ioy with great credit For in the sight of them that were led into captiuitie Zabuzaradan the chiefe steward according to the commaundement of king Nabuchodonozor who willed him to looke well vnto him and to doo him no harme but euen as he himselfe would desire to be dealt withall loosed him from the chaines which were on his hands and intreated him most kindly saying If it please thée to come with me into Babel come and I wil looke wel vnto thée but if it please thée not to come with me into Babel tarry still Behold all the land is before thée whither it séemeth good and conuenient for thée to go thither go So the chiefe steward gaue him vittailes and a reward and let him go If we looke vpon the deathfull sorrow of chaste Susanna do we not in reading her storie reioyce with her to sée what ioy of heart God sent her The Apostle Saint Peter being in prison his bands were loosed the prison doore set wide open and he by an Angel willed to come forth so was his ioy increased vpon the suddain beyond expectation Tolet goe other examples I will vse but this one King Ashuerus through the accusations of wicked Haman gaue out his letters that the Iewes should be slaine throughout his dominions A pittifull thing it was to sée and heare the outcries of the poore distressed Iewes Mardocheus gréeuously mourning yea Hester the Quéene her selfe fainted and fel down in a swoune Yet behold after a while the kings heart and mind is changed after a while life ioy yea and a solemne and a yearly remembrance of that ioy throughout their posterities and generations After a tempest a calme after stormie weather faire All which examples ought to be sufficient incouragements vnto vs not to be daunted or dismaied for any sorrow but rather to sustaine our selues with the hope of ioy to come After pouertie may come wealth after sicknesse Psal 107. 41. health after imprisonment libertie after shame by false reports credite againe after miserie dignitie after hatred good will after sorrow ioy and who knoweth what a day may bring foorth The seruant that endureth much drudgery that is beaten vndeseruedly that continueth painfully that performeth faithfully is in time released and with riches store and plentie blessed when as to remember what great miserie hee hath abidden and gone through is one of his chiefe ioyes Experience prooueth this to be true and the example of Iacobs seruice vnder Laban vnrequited by his grudging maister but plentifully rewarded by God himselfe dooth shewe howe thy sorrowes may bee turned into ioy Feare not saith Tobit to his sonne though thou bee poore for thou hast many things if thou feare God For indéed all Gods blessings especially pertaine to them that feare him though otherwise enioyed by vsurpation and an easie thing it is with God suddeinly to make a poore man rich The sorrowes of sicknesse may ende in ioyfull health King Hezekiah had fiftéene yeares added to his daies and it reioyced him more then his kingdome Compare Iosephs imprisonment with his honour and Susannais credite with her shame and Mordecais miserie with his dignitie and Esaus hatred Pro. 16. 7. toward Iacob altered to good will and louing affection and sée whither it be not true that Christ hath said set downe in the behalfe and respect of the godly Ye shall sorrow but your sorrow shal be turned into ioy It was a benefite and a ioy to Hezekiah to haue his daies prolonged and it was promised to king Iosiah for a great blessing to haue his daies cut off But the cause of this blessing and ioy was the great sorrowe that he tooke considering the great plagues that were to come vpon his people As it was answered by Hulda the Prophetesse These euils which you haue heard read vnto you shall come vpon this land because of their idolatry But to the king that sent you thus shall you say Thus saith the Lord because thy heart did melt when thou heardst what was spoken against this place and didst rent thy clothes and wéepe before me I haue heard it saith the Lord. Behold therefore I will gather Esay 57. 1. thee to thy fathers and thou shalt be put in thy graue in peace and thine eyes shall not sée all the euil which I wil bring vpon this place Moses wéepeth and mourneth to himselfe that he could not be partaker of his desire as to enter into that promised plentifull pleasant land that hée could not sée that goodly mountaine and Lebanon and was angry with his people who were the cause that he was bereaued of his ioy but in that he was taken vp into paradise and placed in the heauens were not all sorrows think you fully and most aboundantly requited with ioy The world
blemish the which the more we desire the more we may and our longing shall neuer be satisfied Behold the ioyes of the world and sée whether they be as durable as the Moone which changeth euery moneth When the Sunne ariseth the beautifull floure withereth and the place thereof shall knowe it no more Glorious Tyrus shal be robbed of her riches Ezech. 26. and they shall spoile her marchandise her walles shall be broken downe and they shall destroy her pleasant houses and they shall cast thy stones and thy timber and thy dust into the midst of the water and thou shalt be built no more For I the Lord haue spoken it Thus wil I cause the sound of thy songs to cease and the sound of thy harpes shall be no more heard Reu. 18. O beautifull Babylon the apples Eze. 26. 21. 27. 36. 28. 9. that thy soule lusted after and those things which thou louedst best are departed from thée and al things which were fat excellent are gone and thou shalt finde them no more And they that wondred at her beautie and shouted for ioy to sée the great cittie that was cloathed in fine linen purple and skarlet and guilded with gold precious stone and pearles euen for her shall they wéep and lament saying Alasse Alasse With great violence shall the great citie Babylon be destroied and cast away and shall be found no more The voice of harpers musitians and of vipers and trumpetters shall be heard no more in thée and no craftsman of whatsoeuer craft he be shall be found any more in thée and the sound of a milstone shall be heard no more in thée And the light of a candle shall shine no more in thée And the voyce of the Bridegroome and of the Bride shall be heard no more in thée What is it to haue the ioy of the world to sée the multitude of children increase of cattell to liue in outward peace to reioyce in the sound of organes and pleasant instruments and suddainly to goe downe to the graue and that without all hope Who though he be dead and gone yet is he kept vnto the day of destruction and shall be brought forth to the day of wrath Wordly comforts and outward ioyes shall be taken away But the ioyes of the godly are such which are not séene and which this world is not worthie of and which shall not be taken away for God hath so promised Let this word be thy warrant and a stedfast beliefe thy anchor-hold Esay 3 5. Strengthen the weake hands saith the Lord by his Prophet and comfort the féeble knées Say vnto them that are fearefull of sorrow and trouble and persecution beholde your God commeth with vengeance euen God with a recompence he wil come and saue you Then shall the eies of the blind be lightened and the eares of the deafe bee opened then shall the lame man leape as an hart and the dumbe mans toong shall sing Therfore the redéemed of the Lord shall returne and come Eze. 28. 25. 26. to Sion with praise and euerlasting ioy shall be vpon their heads they shall obtaine ioy and gladnesse and sorrow and mourning shall flie away Lift vp your eies saith the Prophet Esay 51. 3. 6. to the heauens and looke vpon the earth beneath for heauens shall vanish away like smoke and the earth shal wax old like a garment and they that dwel therin shall perish in like maner But as for the desolations of Sion they shall be restored and she shall be built vp and her stones shall be laid with the carbuncie her wridernesse shal become like the gardein of Eden and more plentifull then paradice it selfe which God at the first created Ioy gladnesse shall be found therein praise and the voice of singing And if thou wouldst behold that ioy that shall not be taken away be hold it in these thrée matters The ioy of the holy Ghost which is vnspeakable and indeterminable the hope of promised reward which is immoueable the reward it selfe which is most glorious Which arguments heare touched heareafter may more fully be enlarged Your ioy shall no man take from you no nor the diuel himselfe with all his legions and millions of companies who haue done vs spight inough and would as yet to the end and in the end put vs from all comfort and kéepe vs backe that we should not be partakers of any ioy Who though he hath throwne vs out of the earthly paradice yet out of the heauenly Ierusalem shall he neuer be able to cast vs although he endeuour neuer so much and labour might and maine For his labours shal be like the buildings of Babel which were without effect and altogether in vaine and in the heigth of his strength he shal be cast downe like lightning He that hath vndertaken to be our helpe and to kéepe vs will neuer faile vs Iohn 6. 39. This is the fathers will which hath sent me saith Christ that of all which he hath giuen me I should léese nothing but should raise it vp againe at the last day and that euery one of them should receiue euerlasting life when as death and damnation the power of the diuell and hell torments shall vtterly be broken Iohn 10. 28. I giue vnto them eternall life and they shall neuer perish neither shall any plucke them out of my hand For my father which gaue them me is greater then all and mightier then the mighty and none is able to take them out of my fathers hand I and my father are one Re●e 20. 4. And I sawe seates and they sate vpon them and iudgement was giuen vnto them and I sawe the soules of them that were be headed for the witnesse of Iesus and for the word of God and which did not worship the beasts neither his image neither had taken his mark vpon their for heads or on their hands and they liued reigned with Christ a thousand year as if he had said ten thousand worlds And againt cap. 7. 13. One of the Elders which appeared vnto S. Iohn in a vision said vnto him What are these which are arraied in long white robes whence came they And he said vnto him Lord thou knowest Who answered these are they which came out of great tribulation and haue washed their long robes and haue made their long robes white in the blood of the lambe Therefore are they now in the presence of God who now hath wiped away all teares from their eies For the former things are passed and there shall be no more death neither sorrow neither crying neither shall there be any more paine and griefe And him that ouercommeth will I make a piller in the temple of my God and he shall goe no more out and I will write vpon him the name of my God and the name of the cittie of my God which is the newe Ierusalem which commeth downe out of heauen from my God and I